iStock/Thinkstock(LOS ANGELES) -- The NFL Network has suspended three analysts, including Hall of Fame running back Marshall Faulk, after an ex-wardrobe stylist for the network filed suit over sexual harassment on Monday.

The woman, Jami Cantor, alleges a number of offenses by NFL Enterprises in the lawsuit, including sexual harassment, age discrimination, wrongful termination, and unfair business practices.

Bloomberg was first to acquire the lawsuit.

"This is a severe case and I think my client is extremely courageous in coming forward," Laura Horton, Cantor's lawyer, said in a statement. "I'm grateful for the national conversation regarding sexual harassment over the last 60-90 days and I hope the conversation continues.

"The supervisors knew about it, the supervisors observed it. It was insidious in this particular environment. It's outrageous conduct and I fully intend to hold the NFL Network responsible."

The three players named in the suit who are still employed by the NFL Network, which is owned by the league, were suspended Monday.

"Marshall Faulk, Ike Taylor, and Heath Evans have been suspended from their duties at NFL Network pending an investigation into these allegations," Alex Riethmiller, vice president of communications for NFL Media, said in a statement.

The lawsuit also makes allegations against ex-NFL Network executive producer Eric Weinberger, who now works for Bill Simmons Media Group. Allegations against Weinberger include sending Cantor nude pictures and explicit texts, groping her and pressing his crotch against her shoulder.

Cantor was 51 when she was fired by NFL Network on October 10, 2016. She started working there around 2006, according to the filing.

Cantor alleges Faulk regularly asked about her sex life, groped her and once pinned her against a wall while he pulled his pants down. Both Taylor and Evans are accused of sending her nude pictures on multiple occasions.

Ex-NFL Network employees and players Donovan McNabb, Eric Davis and Warren Sapp are also named in the lawsuit.

McNabb, who starred for the Philadelphia Eagles, is alleged to have sent sexually inappropriate text messages. Davis, she says, repeatedly discussed sex in front of Cantor and propositioned her.

Sapp allegedly gave Cantor an adult toy for Christmas three years in a row.

Cantor said she repeatedly complained to superiors about the behavior of the network's employees and nothing was done. She said complaints to NFL Talent Coordinator Marc Watts were ignored, with him saying, "It’s part of the job when you look the way you do."

ABC News has reached out to all of the players' agents for comment but they have yet to respond.

The Ringer, which employs Weinberger, said in a statement, “These are very serious and disturbing allegations that we were made aware of today. We are placing Eric on leave indefinitely until we have a better understanding of what transpired during his time at the NFL, and we will conduct our own internal investigation.”

Faulk was a running back for the Indianapolis Colts and St. Louis Rams and is considered one of the greatest all-purpose backs in NFL history, finishing his 12-year career fourth all-time in yards from scrimmage. He was inducted to the Hall of Fame in 2011.

McNabb left NFL Network in 2013, while Davis left earlier this year. Davis now hosts a radio show on ESPN Los Angeles 710 AM.

Vivien Killilea/Getty Images(NEW YORK) -- After 14 years in the NBA, forward Matt Barnes is calling it a career. The 37-year-old, who had not played this season, made the announcement on his Instagram Monday.

"Had a cool 15yr run!!" he wrote. "Traveled the world met alota cool people, some will be brothers for the rest of my life! BUT NOW.... You telling me I can dress like this for business meetings & make more money off the court than I made ON?? & spend more time with my kids??!! ... Let's Do it! Love me or HATE ME, I DID IT MY WAY!"

Barnes certainly did things his way over his 14 years in the league, playing for ten different NBA teams after being drafted out of UCLA in the second round by Memphis Grizzlies in 2002. He played for the Golden State Warriors last season, his second stint with the team, and won the NBA championship.

Barnes wasn't know for his scoring, and usually came off the bench to provide a physical and emotional spark for his team. He was also involved in a feud with former Lakers player and Knicks head coach Derek Fisher, who is dating Barnes' ex-wife, Gloria Govan.

Off the court, Barnes has been running a foundation that helps raise money for cancer patients, and says he is working with his alma mater to help establish a scholarship for children who conquer cancer and want to attend college.

iStock/Thinkstock(MIAMI) -- Every member of the Miami Dolphins is now registered to vote.

The Dolphins, in conjunction with the Drum Major Institute, announced that every player has filed the necessary paperwork to vote in the 2018 election. The voter registration initiative began in June, when Drum Major Institute members Martin Luther King III and Bill Wachtel came to a Dolphins practice to register players to vote.

The Drum Major Institute’s website claims this is the first professional sports team to have a full roster of registered voters.

King plans to spread the voting initiative to other sports franchises, according to the Miami Herald.

"I salute the Miami Dolphins for their leadership in realizing upon my father’s dream of a society where all Americans can and do vote," King said in a statement put out by the Dolphins. "Today, we celebrate the fact that every player on the Dolphins roster is a registered voter. What makes this truly special is that this voter registration effort, which was begun by Kenny Stills, has been spreading throughout the NFL and other sports leagues. As my father often said, that short step into the voting booth is the longest stride for democracy."

The Dolphins statement also announced the creation by owner Stephen Ross and players of an annual fund for advocacy and justice. The fund will provide monetary support for programs surrounding community engagement, education and justice reform.

Gainesville Police Department(GAINESVILLE, Fla.) -- A champion professional wrestler was arrested Saturday night in Gainesville, Florida, for allegedly falsely imprisoning and battering his newlywed wife, who is also a professional wrestler.

World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) said in a statement Sunday that Rich Swann, 26, is suspended indefinitely following his arrest.

Swann was driving with his wife of nine months, Vannarah Riggs, after she had just been in a match when they got into an argument, the Gainesville Police Department stated in an arrest document.

"[Swann] was critiquing [his wife's] performance and began getting angry with her," police said in the document. "The [wife] got scared that the argument was going to escalate and got out of the car."

Swann allegedly stopped his vehicle in the middle of traffic. He gave chase to his wife and yelled for her to "get back in the car," police said in the arrest warrant.

As she tried to elude Swann, he chased her and, when he caught up to her, “grabbed [her] by her arm and then around the neck with his arm.”

"He placed her in a headlock and dragged her back to the vehicle," the arrest statement said.

A witness allegedly observed this and saw Swann "shove her back in the car while she screamed for help," the arrest document said.

Another witness, the complaint said, saw Swann “driving erratically” and a woman “jump out of the vehicle while it was moving and run away.”

"The car was not in park and continued to roll until it hit a telephone pole," the complaint said.

Riggs told police she was afraid of Swann because he “has a temper sometimes,” the complaint said.

When confronted with the physical attack on his wife, Swann denied that he touched her.

The complaint states that Swann, after being read his Miranda rights, told officers he did not grab his wife and put her in the car. He "stated that she got in the car on her own and he never physically touched her.”

Swann told police "he was just trying to get home and she had the phone with the GPS on it so he needed her to come with him,” the complaint states.

Swann was booked for simple battery -- a misdemeanor -- and a felony charge of false imprisonment, according to the criminal complaint.

An Alachua County jail representative told ABC News that Swann made an appearance before a judge and is set to be released on his own recognizance on Sunday.

"WWE has zero tolerance for matters involving domestic violence, and per our policy, Rich Swann has been suspended indefinitely following his arrest," WWE said in a statement.

iStock/Thinkstock(PHILADELPHIA) -- A fabled, more than 100-year-old football rivalry played out at Saturday's Army-Navy game where another story also came to the fore.

A 20-year-old West Point cadet, Simone Askew, became the first African-American woman to lead the traditional march-on ceremony at the game. As first captain, Askew, who is also a Rhodes Scholar, led a roughly 4,400-member Corps of Cadets onto the Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia prior to the 118th Army-Navy game on Saturday.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson administered the coin toss before the game, which Askew's Army team won 14-13 after Navy missed a last-second field goal. Afterward, Tillerson presented Army with the Commander-in-Chief's trophy.

Askew's mother was excited about her daughter's leading role in the pregame march, but in a way, she wasn't entirely surprised. Askew got the idea to attend a military academy when as a young girl she saw this same ceremony, called the march-on.

“She literally saw the [Navy] midshipmen march in formation onto the field and rose up from her chair and pointed at them and said to me, 'What does it take to lead that?’” her mother, Pam Askew, told ABC News of the first Navy game that Simone, of Fairfax, Virginia, attended.

“I could see that spark in her and that it really just ignited a desire to attend a service academy," Pam Askew said. "She was just drawn to this."

In the march-on at the Army-Navy game, uniformed West Point cadets and Naval Academy midshipman take the field in perfect formation in what has become a traditional display of military pageantry.

Pam Askew was a single mother when she would take Simone and younger daughter Nina to Army-Navy games, giving them hot chocolate as they bore cold weather to watch the Army Black Knights versus the Navy Midshipmen.

The mother said she was excited for her daughters to see female cadets and female midshipmen and for them to think that could be them one day.

Pam Askew recalls times she saw hints of Simone's future as she grew up.

While Simone was vacationing with her family in West Virginia, she led her younger sister Nina and some boys to line up into formation in a mock march with her as commander. She was around 7 at the time.

As a high-schooler, Simone stayed up until 2 a.m. baking cookies for the janitors of her school whom she felt had been overlooked during a teachers' appreciation week, her mother said.

"Whether it’s school president or homecoming queen, or even brigade commander, to me, that’s not as important as her willingness to serve others regardless of the title," Pam Askew said.

And although it was a Navy football game that inspired Simone to aim for a military academy, she chose to join the Army military academy.

"Simone truly exemplifies our values of Duty, Honor, Country. Her selection is a direct result of her hard work, dedication and commitment to the Corps over the last three years," Brig. Gen. Steven W. Gilland, commandant of the military academy cadets, said in a statement announcing Simone's appointment.

As First Captain -- a role she's held since August 14 - Simone Askew is the highest-ranking cadet in the chain of command. She previously led the 1,502 cadets as the regimental commander of Cadet Basic Training II -- or "Beast Barracks" -- the second part of a grueling six-and-a half-week training.

Once she graduates from West Point in 2018, Simone Askew has plans to attend Oxford University on her Rhodes Scholarship and attain a master's degree, and after that aims to become an Army engineer.

Her sister Nina, 17, has been conditionally accepted to West Point as well, according to their mother.

iStock/Thinkstock(MEMPHIS, Tenn.) -- Deborah Marion, the mother of murdered Memphis-born NBA player Lorenzen Wright, confronted Wright’s alleged killer with one chilling question during his first court appearance on Thursday -- “How could you have murdered my son?”

Wright was a University of Memphis basketball standout and a 13-year professional player who played for five NBA teams from 1996 to 2009.

Wright was last heard from during a 911 call to a Germantown, Tennessee dispatcher on July 19, 2010, when he can be heard screaming “God damn” as gunshots rattle off in the background. Ten days after receiving the distress call, police discovered Wright’s severely decomposed, bullet-riddled body in the woods of southeast Memphis alongside shell casings from multiple guns.

Police arrested 46-year-old Billy Turner on Tuesday and charged him with first-degree murder. He is currently being held on $1 million bond.

Turner made his first court appearance in front of Shelby County Judge Lee Coffee on Thursday, when Marion, overcome with emotion, yelled at Turner as he entered the courtroom.

Coffee called Marion to the front of the court room shortly after the outburst and admonished her for the outburst.

“This case is not going to be resolved anytime soon," Coffee said. I know it's been seven long years for you. ... Please be respectful of the courtroom and be respectful of the administration of justice."

He continued, “If it happens again I'm going to have to bar you from the court room and I don't want to do that to you."

In response, Marion said, "I want to apologize, but if anybody had a son that was murdered they'd feel me."

Coffee actually shared with Marion that his father had been killed in an effort to show his understanding of her difficult situation.

After the emotional outburst the Wright family left the courthouse without speaking to reporters, ABC affiliate WATN reports.

Billy Turner is expected back in court next week for an arraignment, during which time his family plans to hire a lawyer.